Analysis
ESG Loans in Southeast Asia Plunge 46% as Iran War Bites
Southeast Asia’s ESG loan market collapsed 46% in Q1 2026 to $5.9bn as the Iran war triggered an energy shock, inflation surge, and a flight from sustainable finance.
From Singapore’s boardrooms to Jakarta’s treasury floors, the Iran war’s energy shock has done what regulators and critics could not: it has exposed the profound geopolitical fragility at the heart of Asia’s green lending ambitions.
At a Glance
| Metric | Q1 2026 | Change (YoY) |
|---|---|---|
| ESG Loan Proceeds, Southeast Asia | US$5.9bn | –46.3% |
| ESG Loan Proceeds, APAC ex-Japan | US$16.6bn | –40.3% |
| ESG Bond Proceeds, Southeast Asia | US$4.0bn | –26.5% |
| Global ESG Loan Proceeds | US$148.5bn | +11.5% |
| Brent Crude (peak, Q1 2026) | ~US$100–110/bbl | Morgan Stanley base |
| Asia LNG Spot Price Increase | >140% surge | Post Ras Laffan strike |
| ADB Regional Growth Forecast, 2026–27 | 5.1% | Down from 5.4% |
In the first week of March 2026, as American and Israeli aircraft struck Iranian energy infrastructure and the Strait of Hormuz began its chilling closure to commercial tanker traffic, the conversations that mattered most were not in the Pentagon or the Knesset. They were happening in the treasury departments of Singapore’s Raffles Place, Jakarta’s Sudirman district, and Bangkok’s Silom corridor. CFOs, sustainability officers, and deal bankers were picking up phones and, one by one, pulling the trigger on a single instruction: pause.
The results of those boardroom decisions are now quantified, and they are extraordinary. ESG loan proceeds across Southeast Asia collapsed to just US$5.9 billion in the first quarter of 2026 — a 46.3% plunge from US$11.1 billion in the same period a year earlier, according to data compiled by LSEG Deals Intelligence. ESG bond issuance across the region fell a further 26.5%, to US$4 billion. Broaden the lens to Asia-Pacific excluding Japan, and ESG lending contracted by 40.3% to US$16.6 billion — a figure that places the region in stark, damning contrast with the rest of the world.
The global ESG loan market, by comparison, grew 11.5% over the same period to US$148.5 billion. That divergence — between a globally resilient sustainable finance market and a Southeast Asia in freefall — is not simply a story about one quarter’s bad numbers. It is a structural confession about the vulnerability of green finance in geopolitically exposed emerging markets, and a warning that the net-zero architecture being built across ASEAN may be far more brittle than its architects have been willing to admit.
The Strait of Hormuz and the Price of Green Ambitions
To understand why ESG lending in Southeast Asia collapsed so rapidly, one must first understand what the Iran war did to the fundamental economics of the region. Asia bears the brunt of the Strait of Hormuz closure more than any other region: roughly 84% of the crude oil and 83% of the LNG that passed through the strait in 2024 was bound for Asian buyers. When Iran shut that corridor, it did not just spike Brent crude — it repriced the entire risk framework within which corporate borrowers in Southeast Asia operate.
Regional oil benchmarks surged well above US$150 per barrel while LNG spot prices in Asia rose by more than 140% following Iran’s strike on Qatar’s Ras Laffan complex in mid-March. The Asian Development Bank estimates that regional growth will slow from 5.4% to 5.1% in both 2026 and 2027, while inflation rises to 3.6%. For a corporate treasurer in Manila or Kuala Lumpur contemplating a five-year sustainability-linked loan with performance targets tied to energy consumption or carbon intensity, this is not merely turbulence. It is a fundamental invalidation of the model.
“Geopolitical volatility of this magnitude forces companies to prioritise liquidity and balance sheet resilience above everything else. ESG-linked structures, with their bespoke KPI frameworks and margin ratchets, become the first casualty of a crisis that demands simplicity and speed.”
— Jeong Yoonmee, Head of Global Wholesale Banking Sustainability Office, OCBC
The mechanism is straightforward, even if its scale is startling. ESG-linked loans — those that tie borrowing costs to the achievement of environmental, social, or governance targets — are, by design, complex instruments. They require companies to commit to measurable sustainability KPIs, to engage third-party verifiers, to absorb margin adjustments, and to publish progress. In stable, low-volatility environments, the 10–25 basis point reduction in borrowing costs they offer is worth the administrative burden. In a crisis in which energy costs are spiking, currencies are under pressure, and central banks are rethinking rate paths, that calculus inverts instantaneously. The simpler the instrument, the faster it can be deployed. When survival instincts kick in, the sustainability premium is the first line item crossed off the deal sheet.
The Canary in the Coal Mine
ESG Loan Volume Change, Q1 2026 vs Q1 2025
| Market | Change |
|---|---|
| Southeast Asia | –46.3% |
| APAC ex-Japan | –40.3% |
| Global | +11.5% |
The global resilience of ESG lending at +11.5% is real, and its architects in European capitals and North American boardrooms deserve credit. But it also masks a deeply uncomfortable truth: the markets that have grown fastest and made the boldest net-zero commitments in recent years — precisely the ASEAN economies of Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Singapore — are also those most exposed to geopolitical shocks of the kind now unfolding.
This is the canary-in-the-coal-mine dynamic that sustainable finance’s boosters have too long ignored. Emerging Asia’s ESG market was built on three assumptions: relatively stable energy prices, progressive central bank policies, and a geopolitical environment permissive of long-horizon corporate planning. The Iran war has demolished all three simultaneously. Asia imports more than 56% of its oil from the Middle East and more than 30% of its gas — a dependency that translates directly into sovereign and corporate vulnerability every time the Gulf ignites.
The region’s financial markets have reflected this with brutal clarity. Global stocks have fallen 5.5% since the conflict began, with Asian markets the worst hit. Emerging market currencies have come under sustained pressure as the dollar strengthened. The repricing of risk across credit markets has pushed up financing costs at precisely the moment when corporate borrowers most need predictability. In this environment, green lending — inherently forward-looking, structurally complex, and dependent on confidence in long-term regulatory frameworks — is fighting a rearguard action against crude, immediate financial survival instincts.
ESG vs. Survival: The Commitment Problem
There is a more uncomfortable dimension to this collapse that sustainability advocates must confront honestly: the data strongly suggests that many of the ESG commitments made by Southeast Asian corporates in 2023 and 2024 were, at least partly, cyclical rather than structural. Sustainability-linked loans were attractive when interest rates were falling, when capital was abundant, and when corporate reputations benefited from green credentials that cost relatively little to maintain. The first genuine macroeconomic shock has revealed the depth — or lack thereof — of those commitments.
This is not a new critique. Academic research has consistently shown that low-transparency sustainability-linked loan borrowers exhibit deteriorating ESG performance after issuance, a pattern consistent with greenwashing rather than genuine transformation. The Iran war has simply accelerated and amplified this dynamic, providing corporate boards with a geopolitically credible justification for deferring sustainability spending that was, in many cases, already under pressure from tightening margins.
What is striking, however, is the asymmetry. The 46.3% contraction in ESG loans is far steeper than the 26.5% decline in ESG bonds — and that gap is revealing. Bond markets, with their more diverse investor bases and standardised structures, have proven somewhat more resilient. Loan markets, by contrast, are bilateral and relationship-driven: when a corporate treasurer calls their relationship bank to pause a sustainability-linked facility, it happens quietly, quickly, and without the scrutiny of a public market. The opacity of the loan market is magnifying the withdrawal.
The Net-Zero Clock and a Fractured Pipeline
For Southeast Asia’s climate ambitions, the timing could hardly be worse. The ASEAN bloc has made increasingly bold net-zero pledges over the past three years, and green lending was central to the financing architecture designed to turn those pledges into capital expenditure. Indonesia has committed to peak emissions by 2030 and net-zero by 2060. Vietnam’s 2050 net-zero target requires an estimated US$368 billion in green investment. The Philippines, Malaysia, and Thailand have each committed to substantial renewable energy targets within this decade.
All of those commitments were calibrated to a financing environment that no longer exists. A US$5.2 billion contraction in a single quarter of ESG lending is not a rounding error — it represents delayed solar projects, deferred green building retrofits, and postponed transition finance for the region’s most carbon-intensive industries. The pipeline, once paused, does not restart overnight. ING’s Sustainable Finance Pulse had projected Asia-Pacific to lead global momentum in transition finance in 2026. That forecast now reads as optimistic archaeology from a pre-war strategic calculus.
Governments have attempted to cushion the macro shock — Thailand capped diesel prices, Vietnam weighed fuel tariff cuts, Indonesia expanded fuel subsidies — but these interventions are, by design, diametrically opposed to the price signals that incentivise the private sector to invest in clean energy and sustainable infrastructure. Every rupiah spent subsidising fossil fuels is a signal that the energy transition can wait. It cannot.
The Path Through Disruption: What Comes Next
Scenario A: Ceasefire Holds, Hormuz Normalises (Base Case)
If the current US-Iran ceasefire stabilises and tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz recovers to 80% or above by mid-year, Morgan Stanley expects oil to average US$80–90 per barrel across 2026. Under this scenario, ESG lending volumes in Southeast Asia could recover partially in Q3, with full-year 2026 ESG loan proceeds likely stabilising at around US$20–24 billion — still well below the US$33.9 billion implied by 2025’s run rate, but not catastrophic. The pipeline of deferred deals will not disappear; many will simply be repriced and re-launched with revised KPI structures that better reflect the new energy cost environment.
Scenario B: Prolonged Conflict, Persistent Volatility (Downside)
If oil remains above US$100 per barrel through H2 2026, central banks in the region delay rate cuts or signal hikes, and corporate balance sheets remain under sustained pressure, ESG lending could remain depressed well into 2027. The risk here is not just cyclical contraction but structural damage: if corporates and banks alike perceive green lending as incompatible with periods of high volatility, the market may never recapture its pre-war momentum without regulatory mandates forcing the issue.
The Structural Opportunity
Paradoxically, the energy shock has created a powerful argument for accelerating, not retreating from, the transition. The region’s extreme dependence on Middle Eastern hydrocarbons is precisely what makes domestic renewable energy capacity — solar, geothermal, wind, green hydrogen — a strategic priority of the first order. Vietnam, Indonesia, and Malaysia are already seeing renewed interest from development finance institutions willing to anchor long-tenor green loans that the commercial market has vacated. The ADB, IFC, and bilateral development agencies have balance sheets designed for exactly this moment.
What CFOs, Policymakers, and Investors Must Do Now
Three imperatives flow from this analysis, and they are not optional for anyone who takes the region’s net-zero trajectory seriously.
First, standardise and simplify ESG loan structures for high-volatility environments. The Asia Pacific Loan Market Association and regional banking associations should work urgently on streamlined, crisis-resilient ESG loan templates — structures that preserve the integrity of sustainability KPIs without the administrative complexity that makes them the first casualty of boardroom triage. If green instruments are to be durable, they must be designed for the world as it is, not as sustainable finance’s architects wished it to be.
Second, mobilise development finance as the anchor of last resort. Commercial banks have a fiduciary obligation to retrench when risk spikes — it is futile to moralize about it. The multilateral development banks and export credit agencies that have deeper mandates and longer horizons must step into the gap now, pricing and structuring green loans that keep the pipeline alive until commercial appetite returns. This is exactly what institutions like the ADB’s climate finance facility was built for.
Third, decarbonisation must be reframed as energy security. The political economy of this moment, if anything, strengthens the case for domestic clean energy investment across Southeast Asia. The governments and institutional investors capable of making that argument — and backing it with blended finance, green guarantees, and concessional capital — will determine whether Q1 2026 is remembered as a temporary setback or the beginning of a decade-long detour from the region’s net-zero path.
The Iran war has not killed sustainable finance in Southeast Asia. But it has done something almost as damaging: it has revealed that the market was never as deep, as committed, or as structurally robust as its cheerleaders claimed. The 46.3% collapse in ESG loans is a number that demands honesty, not spin. The conversation it forces — about geopolitical risk, about the true depth of corporate ESG commitment, about the architecture of green finance in emerging markets — is one the region could no longer afford to defer. It is, in the bleakest sense, the most useful crisis the sustainable finance community in Southeast Asia has yet faced.
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Analysis
A Retro Rally Is Coming from E-Merging Markets
The world’s most exciting investment story isn’t happening in Silicon Valley. It’s playing out in Seoul, São Paulo, Mumbai, and Lima — and most of Wall Street is still asleep at the wheel.
There is a particular kind of market moment that veteran investors recognize not from data screens or analyst decks, but from a feeling — a low hum of structural inevitability that precedes the loudest rallies. I felt it in 2001, when a commodities-drunk world began pouring capital into Brazil, Russia, and South Korea as if Jim O’Neill had personally rung a dinner bell. I felt it again in 2009, when BRICS balance sheets, flush with reserves and unburdened by subprime toxin, recovered so fast they made Western regulators look like amateur philosophers. And I am feeling it again now, in the spring of 2026, with an urgency that is harder to ignore than ever.
Call it the retro rally. The e-merging markets — emerging economies that are simultaneously digitally merging with global capital flows and structurally reconnecting with the fundamentals that powered their last great supercycle — are staging a comeback. It is disciplined. It is broad. And it is, I will argue, only just beginning.
The Numbers Don’t Lie (And They Are Screaming)
Let us start with the facts, because they are arresting enough on their own. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index delivered a total return of 33.6% in 2025, outpacing both the S&P 500 (17.9%) and the MSCI World Index (21.6%). That is not a rounding error. That is a generational rerating.
And 2026 is not cooling off. After that stellar 2025, the MSCI EM Index is up 7% year-to-date, and the technical backdrop remains constructive — the index recently cleared major resistance stemming from its 2021 highs, with more than two-thirds of constituents trading above their 200-day moving average. More tellingly, the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF attracted more than $4 billion in January 2026 alone, its strongest month for inflows since 2015.
The five best-performing country-specific ETFs so far this year all belong to emerging markets. Leading the parade: South Korea’s iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (EWY), up 43.28% year-to-date after a staggering 96% surge in 2025. Even the skeptics who called 2025 a dollar-weakening mirage are having a harder time arguing that case now.
Why “Retro”? Because the Playbook Is Ancient — and It Works
Here is where most commentary goes wrong. The mainstream narrative frames the 2025–2026 EM rally as a derivative of two developments: a weakening U.S. dollar and AI semiconductor euphoria radiating outward from Taiwan and South Korea. Those are real. But they are the headlines, not the story.
The deeper story is that the fundamentals driving this rally look uncannily like 2003. And that should excite you — because what followed 2003 was one of the most sustained, wealth-generating bull markets in emerging-market history.
Think about what the early 2000s EM boom was built on: commodity tailwinds, disciplined central bank policy, domestic demand expansion, current-account surplus accumulation, and valuations so compressed that even modest earnings growth produced explosive equity returns. During the early 2000s, emerging markets saw strong growth, driven by China’s economic expansion, rising commodity prices, and increased foreign direct investment — and P/E ratios surged, reflecting investor optimism.
Today’s setup rhymes with remarkable precision. Commodity-linked economies such as Brazil and Peru are benefiting from firm metals and agricultural demand, while Thailand and Turkey are gaining from improved financial conditions and cyclical recovery dynamics. Domestic consumption is rising across South and Southeast Asia. And central banks across the EM universe — having run tighter monetary policy than the Fed for two consecutive years — are now positioned to ease from positions of genuine credibility, not desperation.
This is not the chaotic, liquidity-addled EM surge of 2009. It is something quieter, more structural, and — paradoxically — more durable.
The Valuation Case: A 42% Discount Is Not a Coincidence
Spend enough decades in this business and you develop a deep suspicion of the word “cheap.” Markets are cheap for a reason, and often that reason is correct. But the current valuation gap between emerging and developed markets is not a reflection of risk-adjusted reality. It is a legacy of a decade-long capital migration toward U.S. tech concentration that has now, visibly, begun to reverse.
Even after the 2025 rally, the MSCI EM Index still trades at around a 42% discount to the S&P 500 — noticeably wider than the long-term average discount of 32%. Read that again. After its best year since 2017, after 33% total returns, after a flood of institutional recognition — EM is more discounted relative to its own history than it was before the rally. That is not a sign of a market that has peaked. That is a sign of a market that has barely begun to reprice.
Over the next two years, EM offers slightly better earnings growth than the S&P 500 — 14.9% CAGR versus 14.5% — at considerably lower valuations. The PEG ratio for EM sits at just 0.9x, compared with 1.5x for the U.S. and 1.3x for Europe.
The setup is almost offensively simple. You are being offered superior earnings growth at a structural discount, in markets where institutional allocations are near 20-year lows. EM allocations remain close to a 20-year low, while the U.S. has sucked in global capital like an AI-powered robotic Dyson.
That Dyson is starting to clog.
The Great Rotation: Why U.S. Tech Concentration Is the E-Merging World’s Best Friend
Here is the contrarian spine of this argument, the thing I believe most forcefully and that most commentators are still too timid to say plainly: the coming EM supercycle is not just enabled by dollar weakness — it is structurally powered by the inevitable rotation away from U.S. tech concentration.
U.S. equities now account for roughly two-thirds of global equity benchmarks, an extraordinary concentration. When allocations are that skewed, even modest adjustments can have meaningful consequences. A one-percentage-point reallocation away from U.S. equities can translate into a proportionally significant inflow into EM simply because the asset class is smaller.
Consensus expects 21% EPS growth in EM equities in 2026 — substantially higher than the U.S. at 15% and developed markets at 13%. Meanwhile, markets have begun to question the eye-watering valuations of U.S. tech stocks, and the U.S. Dollar Index is on the cusp of breaking a long-term uptrend — further weakness could introduce 5% or more in downside from a technical analysis perspective.
Every percentage point of dollar depreciation is an earnings multiplier for EM corporates reporting in local currencies but competing in global commodity and export markets. It is, in effect, a stealth stimulus that requires no legislation, no central bank vote, and no press conference from Jerome Powell.
Goldman Sachs Research forecasts that emerging-market stocks will return roughly 16% in 2026, with falling interest rates, Chinese export strength, and earnings growth among the primary tailwinds. The firm also notes that EM has become more resilient to global shocks — when AI bubble fears triggered U.S. selloffs, the MSCI EM Index declined less than the S&P 500 on average.
Country by Country: Where the Alpha Is Actually Hiding
South Korea has gone from geopolitical punchline to portfolio hero. The KOSPI’s near-doubling over the past 18 months reflects not just semiconductor euphoria, but a genuine corporate governance revolution — something Korean conglomerates have resisted for generations. The “Value-Up” program, forcing chaebol to return capital and improve ROE, is doing for Korean equities what Abenomics once promised — but actually delivering.
Brazil is having a commodity and political-stability moment simultaneously, a combination that rarely lasts but, when it arrives, is extraordinarily powerful. Iron ore, soybeans, and deepwater oil are all trading above long-run marginal cost. The Lula government, whatever its fiscal ambitions, has not scared off foreign direct investment the way markets feared in 2022.
India is the secular story — but now with cyclical tailwinds. Manufacturing investment, a consumption middle class of 400 million and growing, and an AI-adoption curve that J.P. Morgan describes as underpinning “durable structural growth trends” are compounding into one of the most structurally compelling investment theses in any market, anywhere. J.P. Morgan’s 2026 outlook is driven by cyclical factors such as a weaker U.S. dollar and more favorable global financial conditions, combined with structural growth trends they believe will allow EM GDP to outpace developed markets meaningfully, underpinned by stronger demographics, rising domestic consumption, and continued investment into manufacturing, infrastructure, and digital ecosystems.
Peru deserves more attention than it receives. Copper demand from the global electrification supercycle is not slowing. Peru sits atop some of the most economically extractable reserves on earth, and its equity market remains priced as though the global energy transition is someone else’s story.
Thailand and Turkey are benefiting from cyclical recovery dynamics and improved financial conditions — not the sexy headline, but often where the real money is made when a rally broadens.
The AI Spillover: Not What You Think
The AI narrative in emerging markets is typically told through Taiwan’s TSMC and South Korea’s Samsung and SK Hynix. That story is real. Earnings per share are expected to increase 37% in EM’s technology hardware and semiconductor sectors in 2026, and almost 15% in the internet, media, and entertainment sector.
But the more interesting AI spillover story is the one happening beneath the headlines. China’s technology sector is thriving again, boosted by the emergence of AI startup DeepSeek and supportive government policies encouraging entrepreneurs. China’s tech giants are flush with cash to fuel growth plans for AI and other ventures.
And then there is the infrastructure dimension. The data centers, the energy grids, the undersea cables, the ports — the physical scaffolding of the digital economy — are being built aggressively across Southeast Asia, the Gulf, and parts of Latin America. The equity beneficiaries are not just chip makers. They are construction firms, utilities, logistics operators, and banks writing the project finance. This is old-fashioned capex-cycle investing, running in parallel with the semiconductor narrative, largely invisible to investors who are only watching the Magnificent Seven.
The Risks Are Real — Don’t Let the Optimism Fool You
I have watched too many EM bull markets shatter on geopolitical glass to paper over the risks here. They are substantial:
- Trump tariffs remain an existential variable. A broad tariff escalation targeting Southeast Asian manufacturing — Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia — could rapidly compress margins in export-oriented economies. The administration’s unpredictability is itself a risk premium that does not appear in any valuation model.
- China slowdown is the perennial tail risk. China makes up 31% of the MSCI EM Index weighting, and while macro conditions are slowly improving and deflation is being addressed by shuttering inefficient capacity, the recovery remains fragile. A property-sector relapse or another round of technology-sector crackdowns could drag the entire index.
- Dollar reversal: The EM bull case depends heavily on continued dollar softness. If U.S. growth surprises to the upside in late 2026 — forcing the Fed to pause its easing — the dollar could strengthen sharply, unwinding a significant portion of EM currency gains.
- Geopolitical shocks: The Korean Peninsula, the Taiwan Strait, and the India-Pakistan border all carry non-trivial escalation risk in the current environment.
The IMF’s World Economic Outlook and Bank for International Settlements research on capital flow volatility are worth reading carefully alongside any EM optimism. These institutions have the institutional memory, and the scar tissue, that many retail-focused EM narratives lack.
The Structural Case: This Is Not 2010 (Thank God)
The 2009–2010 EM recovery was fueled by Chinese stimulus-driven commodity demand and a near-zero interest rate flood of capital with nowhere else to go. It ended badly — not with a crash, but with a decade of grinding underperformance as China slowed, the dollar strengthened, and U.S. tech became the only trade that mattered.
This rally’s foundations are different. Structurally different. What began as a rebound is developing into something more structural, powered by capital flows, currency dynamics, and a macroeconomic cycle that increasingly favors parts of the developing world. The key distinction: EM central banks are entering an easing cycle from positions of genuine credibility. Stronger EM balance sheets and rising domestic investment are encouraging capital to flow out of the U.S. and into EM markets — a dynamic already showing up in firmer EM and Asian currencies.
When capital follows genuine earnings improvement rather than yield desperation, it tends to stay longer.
State Street Global Advisors articulates the critical structural thesis: the EM-versus-developed-market return-on-equity convergence story is the trend investors will most want to watch in 2026 and beyond. If EM can out-earn developed markets and inch closer to world ROE levels, EM equities could enter a new cycle of sustained strength.
ROE convergence is not a trading thesis. It is a decade-long structural argument. And it is quietly — almost shyly — starting to assert itself.
Implications for Investors and Policymakers
For global investors, the message is uncomfortable in its simplicity: the time to build meaningful EM exposure is not after the consensus is formed. It is now, while allocations are near 20-year lows, while the valuation discount exceeds its long-term average, and while the structural tailwinds are clear but underweighted. The specific opportunities worth examining — through Aberdeen’s analytical framework, Capital Group’s regional research, or Lazard Asset Management’s EM outlook — are in South Korean and Taiwanese hardware, Indian domestic consumption, Brazilian commodity exporters, and select Southeast Asian industrial beneficiaries of supply-chain reshoring.
For policymakers in the developed world, the EM resurgence carries a message that ought to prompt genuine reflection: two decades of capital concentration in U.S. tech — enabled by regulatory permissiveness, zero interest rates, and passive index mechanics — have created a fragility that is only now becoming visible. When that capital begins to rotate, as it is doing, the reverberations will be felt not just in portfolio returns but in trade balances, currency markets, and the geopolitical leverage that capital concentration quietly confers.
For emerging-market policymakers themselves, this moment is both an opportunity and a test. The investors flowing in now are not the hot-money tourists of 2009. They are institutional allocators looking for durable returns, governed by ESG mandates and long-term liability matching. They will stay — but only if policy frameworks remain coherent. Fiscal discipline, central bank credibility, and rule of law are not abstract virtues. Right now, they are priced assets.
The Punchline: The Retro Rally Has Barely Begun
I have spent thirty years watching capital flow around the world in patterns that look random until, suddenly, they look obvious. This is one of those moments of gathering obviousness. The e-merging markets — the ones digitally integrating with global capital while structurally reconnecting with the fundamentals that drove their greatest historical outperformance — are not in the middle of a cycle. They are, if the evidence is read honestly, at the beginning of one.
The 2000s boom made generational fortunes for investors who understood that value, domestic demand, commodity exposure, and policy discipline could compound over a decade when the developed world was busy with its own crises. Today’s version of that story has additional layers: AI infrastructure, supply-chain rewiring, demographic dividends, and a dollar that is beginning to crack.
The rally is real. The discount is real. The structural case is real. The only thing that is not real is the consensus that this is already priced in.
It is not. Not even close.
The e-merging world is merging with the global economy on its own terms, at its own pace, with its own balance sheets. That is not nostalgia. That is the future — dressed in a very familiar suit.
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Analysis
Thailand’s $30 Billion Debt Gamble: Necessary Crisis Medicine or Fiscal Recklessness?
Thailand mulls raising its public debt ceiling to 75% of GDP for $30 billion in new borrowing. Is it bold crisis management or a dangerous leap into a fiscal abyss? An in-depth analysis.
In a country where fiscal prudence has long doubled as national identity, the numbers arriving from Bangkok this week carry a weight beyond arithmetic. Thailand’s government is quietly moving to raise its public debt ceiling — for the second time in five years — to make room for roughly one trillion baht, or $30 billion, in fresh borrowing. The culprit this time is not a pandemic but a geopolitical wildfire: the US–Iran conflict that has throttled global energy markets, pushed Brent crude toward $100 a barrel, and exposed, with brutal clarity, just how dangerously dependent the Thai economy remains on imported energy. The question confronting Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul is one faced by finance ministers across the emerging world: when does necessary stimulus tip into a debt spiral you cannot escape?
A Ceiling Built for Calmer Times
Thailand’s current public debt ceiling of 70% of GDP was itself an emergency upgrade. In September 2021, as the pandemic ravaged Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha’s government raised the statutory cap from 60% to 70% under the State Fiscal and Financial Disciplines Act of 2018, unlocking room for 1.5 trillion baht in Covid-era borrowing. At the time, it was sold as a temporary measure. Five years on, public debt has never come close to falling back below 60%, and the ceiling the government once vowed to treat as a hard limit is about to be cracked open again.
Bloomberg reported today that officials from the Finance Ministry and the Prime Minister’s office are in active discussions to raise that ceiling to 75% of GDP — a five-percentage-point jump that would unlock approximately one trillion baht in new fiscal space. Deputy Prime Minister Pakorn Nilprapunt confirmed Monday that the government is preparing an emergency decree for initial borrowing of up to 500 billion baht. A final decision requires sign-off from the fiscal and monetary policy committee chaired by Anutin himself, a politician better known for populism than fiscal discipline.
The Energy Shock Making the Case
The economic rationale for intervention is not contrived. Thailand is, by the metrics that matter most in an oil shock, among the most exposed economies in Asia. The country’s net energy imports run to roughly 6–8% of GDP — the largest such deficit in the region — and approximately 58% of its fuel imports originate from the Middle East. When the Strait of Hormuz tightened and oil prices surged, Thailand didn’t just feel a headwind. It walked into a wall.
The transmission is already visible across three channels:
- Energy costs: KKP Research estimates that a moderate-conflict scenario with oil at $90–105/barrel inflicts approximately 202.9 billion baht in additional energy costs on the Thai economy.
- Exports: Higher input costs cascade through Thailand’s manufacturing supply chains — petrochemicals, plastics, automotive parts — shaving an estimated 195 billion baht from export revenues.
- Tourism: Gulf tourism, which normally accounts for 7% of total visitor spending, has collapsed to near zero following airport closures caused by Iranian attacks in March, cutting tourism income by an estimated 29 billion baht.
The Bank of Thailand has already slashed its 2026 GDP growth forecast to 1.3%, down from 1.9% projected just four months ago, assuming the conflict ends in the second half of the year. The World Bank’s April 2026 East Asia and Pacific Economic Update independently arrived at the same figure, identifying Thailand alongside Laos and Cambodia as the region’s most exposed economies. In a prolonged-war scenario, with Brent at $135–145, independent analysts at SCB EIC warn that growth could crater to just 0.2% while inflation surges toward 5.8%.
The Oil Fund: A Fiscal Time Bomb Already Ticking
Before examining the wisdom of a debt ceiling increase, it is worth understanding the fiscal pressure already on the table. Thailand’s Oil Fund — the statutory mechanism that cushions domestic fuel prices against global volatility — was, as of late March, burning through an extraordinary 2.59 billion baht per day, with its accumulated deficit reaching 35 billion baht and monthly subsidy exposure of approximately 80 billion baht. When the Oil Fund exhausts its own borrowing capacity and the government is forced to issue sovereign guarantees for its liabilities, those debts convert directly into public debt. The ceiling increase, in this light, is partly a belated recognition of contingent liabilities already crystallising on the state’s balance sheet.
The baht, meanwhile, has depreciated approximately 5% against the dollar in recent months, eroding the purchasing power of Thailand’s import-heavy economy and adding a currency dimension to what was already an inflationary energy shock. Foreign investors pulled $823 million net from Thai equities and $705 million from bonds in March alone — the largest combined outflow since October 2024. Every baht of new sovereign borrowing must be priced against that backdrop.
The IMF’s Uncomfortable Counterview
Here is where the story becomes uncomfortable for Bangkok’s fiscal architects. Less than a year ago, the International Monetary Fund explicitly advised Thailand to reinstate its former 60% debt ceiling — not raise the existing one to 75%. The Fund’s concern was structural: Thailand’s “fiscal space” — the buffer between current debt and a level that impairs the state’s ability to absorb future shocks — is eroding faster than headline numbers suggest. Off-budget borrowing through state-owned enterprises and instruments like Section 28 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act add further opacity to the true debt burden.
The IMF’s warning that a sustainable ceiling, accounting for future shock risk, may be as low as 66% reads today not as excessive caution but as prescient. Thailand’s public debt is already projected at 68.17% of GDP by the end of fiscal year 2026 under baseline assumptions — before any new emergency borrowing. Add one trillion baht in fresh issuance and the ratio easily pushes toward 73–74%, a whisker from the proposed new ceiling, with no guarantee that the energy shock ends on schedule.
Fiscal Credibility: The Asset Markets Cannot Price
The core risk is one that does not appear in any quarterly budget statement: fiscal credibility. Thailand’s investment-grade sovereign rating and its ability to borrow domestically at relatively low spreads have rested, in part, on a public perception — reinforced by law — that its government respects statutory debt limits. Raising the ceiling twice in five years, and in the current episode doing so via an emergency decree that bypasses the normal legislative deliberation, sends a signal to bond markets that the ceiling is political rather than structural.
Consider the global context. The post-2022 emerging-market debt landscape has been fundamentally reshaped by the era of higher-for-longer interest rates and successive external shocks. Countries from Sri Lanka to Pakistan to Ghana discovered, at enormous social cost, that the distance between “manageable” debt and debt crisis compresses rapidly when growth disappoints, currencies weaken, and refinancing costs spike simultaneously. Thailand is not in that class — it has deeper capital markets, stronger institutions, and a far healthier current account. But the direction of travel matters as much as the current coordinates.
MUFG Research notes one important mitigant: unlike 2022, Thailand enters this shock with a current account surplus of approximately 3% of GDP, versus a deficit of 2.1% during the Russia-Ukraine episode. That is a genuine buffer. But it also argues for a more targeted, time-limited borrowing programme — not a permanent ceiling expansion that becomes the new baseline for the next crisis.
What the Money Should Buy — and What It Should Not
Not all stimulus is equal, and Thailand’s government has not yet specified how the new funds would be raised or spent. That ambiguity is itself a warning sign. The experience of Covid-era emergency decrees across Southeast Asia — where large borrowing programmes were approved in principle, then captured by political patronage, transfers to loss-making state enterprises, or infrastructure projects of questionable economic return — should weigh heavily on the design of any new spending package.
The case for spending is strongest in three areas:
- Targeted energy subsidies for households and small enterprises below an income threshold, replacing the blunt Oil Fund mechanism that subsidises luxury vehicle owners alongside the genuinely vulnerable.
- Reskilling and manufacturing resilience investments that reduce long-term energy intensity — a structural reform Thailand has deferred for two decades.
- Tourism infrastructure that diversifies away from Gulf and Chinese dependency, building resilience for the next shock.
The case for spending is weakest in two areas:
- Blanket cash transfers that generate consumption without addressing the supply-side energy constraint.
- Capital injections into state-owned enterprises — energy companies, airlines, transit networks — that absorb fiscal resources without improving allocative efficiency.
Government Spokesperson Rachada Dhnadirek’s carefully vague assurance that Anutin’s administration “will explore all options to ease the hardship of the public” is precisely the kind of language that has historically preceded fiscally undisciplined spending in Thailand’s political economy.
The ASEAN Lens: Thailand Is Not Alone, But It Is Not Average
Thailand’s predicament mirrors, with regional variations, a broader ASEAN fiscal dilemma. The World Bank estimates that US tariffs — now running roughly nine percentage points higher on average than in 2024 — are shaving 0.5 percentage points or more from Thai GDP on top of the energy shock. The compound effect of simultaneous trade and energy shocks, arriving at precisely the moment that a new government needs political credibility, is genuinely severe.
Yet within ASEAN, the contrast with Malaysia is instructive. Malaysia — a net oil exporter — has seen its fiscal position strengthen as prices rise, even while raising diesel prices to 39.54 baht per litre. Indonesia is managing its energy exposure through a combination of production diversification and targeted subsidy reform. Vietnam, despite similar exposure to global supply chains, has maintained tighter fiscal discipline and is benefiting from trade-diversion away from China.
Thailand’s structural challenge is not merely cyclical. The World Bank’s April 2026 assessment explicitly links the country’s growth underperformance to a failure to advance structural reforms — not just to external shocks. Raising a debt ceiling without a credible medium-term fiscal framework for returning debt below 70% risks entrenching, not resolving, that structural weakness.
The Verdict: Borrow — But Bind Yourself While You Do
This column’s position is neither dogmatic austerity nor blank-cheque stimulus. The case for emergency borrowing is real: Thailand faces an asymmetric external shock that its monetary policy tools — with the policy rate already at historically low levels and the baht already under pressure — cannot adequately address alone. Fiscal intervention is warranted.
But the design of that intervention matters enormously. The Thailand debt ceiling increase to 75% of GDP should be conditional, not permanent. Specifically, the government should:
- Sunset the new ceiling — legislate an automatic return to 70% once public debt falls below 71% for two consecutive fiscal years, removing the political incentive to treat 75% as the new normal.
- Ring-fence the borrowing with mandatory quarterly expenditure disclosure and an independent audit mechanism, publishing spending breakdowns in line with IMF fiscal transparency standards.
- Link new issuance to structural benchmarks — energy efficiency targets, subsidy means-testing completion, and tourism diversification metrics — that create accountability beyond the next election cycle.
- Engage multilateral creditors early: An ADB policy-based loan or IMF precautionary arrangement would reduce market borrowing costs and send a credibility signal to bond investors.
Thailand has borrowed its way through crises before and emerged. The 1997–98 Asian Financial Crisis remains the region’s most searing lesson in what happens when debt management loses its anchor. Anutin’s government would be wise to remember that the baht’s credibility, once lost, took a decade to restore.
A $30 billion bet on fiscal stimulus, properly designed and tightly governed, can be crisis medicine. Executed carelessly, in the heat of political pressure and with the spending plan still “not finalised,” it risks being the first act of a longer, more painful fiscal drama — one whose consequences will outlast any single government, any single energy shock, and quite possibly, this prime minister’s tenure.
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Analysis
Kevin Warsh: Trump’s Next Fall Guy at the Fed?
The Nominee to Lead the World’s Most Powerful Central Bank Wants Big Changes. But There’s Risk of Confrontation with the President Over Interest Rates.
Tomorrow morning, at 10 a.m. in Washington, a 55-year-old former investment banker turned Hoover Institution fellow will sit before the Senate Banking Committee and attempt the most perilous balancing act in contemporary economic governance. Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump’s nominee to chair the Federal Reserve, must simultaneously convince senators that he will pursue price stability with independence, assure markets that he won’t torch the institutional credibility it took decades to build, and somehow avoid telegraphing to his future boss in the White House that he does not, in fact, intend to slash interest rates to 1 percent on demand.
This is not merely a confirmation hearing. It is the opening act of what may become the defining institutional drama of Trump’s second term — and the outcome will reverberate from Frankfurt to Jakarta, from London gilt markets to South Asian currency floors.
The Nomination Nobody Saw Coming — and Everyone Did
Trump announced Warsh’s nomination on January 30, 2026, formally submitting it to the Senate on March 4. On its surface, the choice was bold: Warsh is a Republican economist with genuine monetary policy experience, having served as the youngest-ever Fed governor from 2006 to 2011, navigating the white-water rapids of the global financial crisis alongside Ben Bernanke. He is credentialed (Stanford undergraduate, Harvard Law), well-connected (Morgan Stanley investment banker before his Fed tenure, advisory work for Stanley Druckenmiller’s family office thereafter), and politically aligned.
But Warsh’s financial disclosures, filed this week in a dense 69-page document, reveal a wealth profile that sets him apart from every Fed chair in modern history. His personal holdings range between $135 million and $226 million — the imprecision owing to Senate disclosure rules that allow assets to be reported in open-ended ranges, with two positions in the “Juggernaut Fund” listed simply as “over $50 million each.” His wife, Jane Lauder, granddaughter of cosmetics legend Estée Lauder, carries an estimated net worth of $1.9 billion according to Forbes. Combined, the Warsh-Lauder household may represent the wealthiest family ever to occupy the Fed’s Eccles Building.
Senator Elizabeth Warren, never one to miss a theatre cue, was already scrutinizing the fund disclosures Thursday, pointing to the opacity of the Juggernaut holdings as a potential conflict-of-interest issue. Warsh has pledged to divest if confirmed — a commitment his legal team will need to execute with considerable speed, given that Powell’s term expires May 15 and the White House has made clear it wants its man in the chair by then.
That timeline is under pressure from an unexpected quarter. Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina, a senior Republican on the Banking Committee, has declared he will block Warsh’s final confirmation vote unless the Justice Department drops its criminal investigation into Powell — a probe many believe was manufactured specifically to bully the current chair into rate cuts. Republicans hold a razor-thin Senate majority, meaning Tillis’s objection alone can derail the entire nomination. As of this writing, the DOJ investigation remains open. Jeanine Pirro, U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, has pledged to press forward despite setbacks. The confirmation math is deeply uncomfortable for everyone involved.
From Hawk to Hawkish Dove: The Policy Evolution That Made Him Palatable to Trump
If you had asked financial markets in 2011 whether Kevin Warsh would ever be seen as a rate-cut ally, the response would have been laughter. During his tenure as Fed governor, Warsh was among the most vocal critics of quantitative easing, warning presciently that the Fed’s expanding balance sheet would create long-term distortions in capital markets. He dissented against what he viewed as mission creep — a central bank that had metastasised from lender of last resort into a structural participant in government bond markets.
That hawkishness has not vanished. It has been refashioned. In the years since leaving the Fed, Warsh has constructed an intellectual framework that allows him to advocate for lower short-term interest rates while simultaneously demanding dramatic reductions in the Fed’s $6.7 trillion balance sheet. The argumentative keystone is artificial intelligence. Warsh contends that an AI-driven productivity surge — already visible in frontier sectors, he argues — creates the conditions under which rate cuts need not be inflationary. If AI meaningfully expands productive capacity, the neutral interest rate falls, and current policy rates are, in this framing, de facto restrictive even without any acceleration in prices.
It is a seductive thesis. It also has its serious critics. Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee told journalists in February that the Fed should emphatically not bank on AI-driven productivity gains to pre-emptively justify looser policy. “You can overheat the economy easily,” Goolsbee cautioned, urging “circumspection.” The concern is not merely theoretical. Futures markets, even before the U.S. military struck Iranian nuclear and oil infrastructure, had priced in only 50 basis points of cuts through the entirety of 2026 — a signal that institutional investors simply do not believe Warsh can deliver the rate environment Trump envisions.
The Iran Shock and the Inflation Trap
This is where the geopolitical and the monetary collide with particular force. The U.S. attack on Iran — the energy shock reverberating through global commodity markets — has sent oil prices surging toward and beyond $100 a barrel. Inflation forecasts, which had been drifting downward through early 2026, are now trending back up. Remarkably, futures markets have begun pricing a non-trivial probability of a rate hike from the Federal Reserve before year’s end, not a cut.
Into this environment steps a nominee whose central economic argument — AI productivity as a disinflationary force — now must compete with the hard, immediate reality of petrol price pass-through, supply chain disruptions from Middle Eastern instability, and consumer expectations growing unmoored. The irony is almost Shakespearean: Trump nominated Warsh partly because he seemed willing to cut rates; now Warsh may be confirmed into a situation where the economically responsible course is to hold rates steady or tighten.
This is the fall-guy scenario, and it deserves to be named plainly. If Warsh takes the chair in May, inherits an economy facing renewed inflation from energy shocks, and then declines to cut rates aggressively — as economic prudence would likely demand — Trump will have a perfect target. The president who demanded 1 percent interest rates will face a Fed chair who is not delivering them. The chair will be blamed, publicly and loudly, for economic pain that originated in geopolitical decisions made in the White House’s own Situation Room.
Warsh will not be the first economist to occupy that chair under those circumstances. He would, however, be the first to have sought it in the full knowledge of the trap being laid.
The Structural Agenda: Balance Sheet, Regime Change, and the “Family Fight” Model
Strip away the rate-cut politics and what remains is genuinely interesting. Warsh envisions a Fed that is leaner, less communicative in public, and more disciplined in its market interventions. His critique of forward guidance — the practice of telegraphing future policy moves to markets in granular detail — is substantive: he argues it has made the Fed a prisoner of its own communications, forced to delay necessary adjustments because it has over-committed in its messaging.
In a 2023 interview, Warsh outlined what he calls the “family fight” model of policymaking: robust, unconstrained debate behind closed doors, followed by institutional unity in public. This represents a deliberate departure from the era of dissent-as-performance, where individual FOMC members have used public speeches to pre-negotiate policy in the open, fragmenting the institution’s voice and market credibility simultaneously.
The balance-sheet agenda is where Warsh’s structural convictions are most consequential for global markets. He has argued consistently that the Fed’s multi-trillion-dollar holdings of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities represent a distortion of capital markets — one that has, paradoxically, suppressed long-term yields while subsidizing federal borrowing and inflating asset prices. A Warsh-led Fed pursuing aggressive quantitative tightening would push long-term rates higher even as short-term rates are cut, a “hawkish dove” configuration that has almost no historical precedent. The closest analogy is perhaps the late 1990s Greenspan era, when exceptional productivity growth (from the early internet buildout) allowed the economy to absorb tighter financial conditions without triggering recession. Warsh is betting the AI moment is analogous. It may be. It may not be.
The Independence Question: Does He Mean It?
The central question hanging over the April 21 hearing is one no senator will frame quite so bluntly but every analyst is asking: will Kevin Warsh be functionally independent from the president who appointed him?
The legal and institutional architecture of Fed independence is formidable. The Treasury-Fed Accord of 1951 enshrined it. Decades of practice have reinforced it. Markets price in a substantial “independence premium” — the expectation that the Fed will respond to economic data rather than political instruction. Any erosion of that premium would trigger a dollar selloff, a spike in Treasury yields, and a rapid repricing of sovereign risk that would transmit across emerging-market currencies from the Turkish lira to the Indonesian rupiah.
Warsh has said, repeatedly, that independence is “crucial” to the Fed’s function. But he has also argued, in language that pleased the White House, that independence does not preclude immediate rate cuts and that the Fed has, under Powell, overstepped into policy territory beyond its mandate — from climate risk to social equity. These are arguments that conveniently align with the administration’s preferences while being framed in the language of institutional restraint.
The CFR’s Roger Ferguson put it sharply: financial markets will react decisively to any sign that the Fed is abandoning its data-driven approach. The OMFIF was blunter still, noting that “presumably ex-hawk Warsh is capable of reading Truth Social and got the memo” on rate cuts. That observation is as concise a summary of the confirmation’s underlying tension as any I have encountered.
The risk is not necessarily that Warsh will be a crude supplicant. It is subtler. A chair who believes, genuinely and in good faith, that AI productivity justifies rate cuts will, in the near term, produce outcomes indistinguishable from a chair who is simply following orders. The divergence comes later — when inflation data turns inconvenient, when the oil shock bites harder, when the data demands a hold or a hike. It is at that moment that the question of independence becomes existential, not theoretical.
Global Stakes: What the Rest of the World Is Watching
The Federal Reserve’s decisions reverberate well beyond American borders, and the world’s central bankers are watching tomorrow’s hearing with unusual intensity.
In the eurozone, the ECB faces its own dilemma: a weakening growth outlook and a dollar that has been volatile against the euro as Warsh’s confirmation odds have fluctuated. A hawkish balance-sheet Warsh who nonetheless cuts short-term rates creates a peculiar dollar trajectory — weaker in short-term interest rate differential terms, but stronger in longer-term credibility terms. European policymakers cannot easily model that divergence.
In Asia, the picture is more acute. Japan’s Bank of Japan has been edging toward policy normalisation after decades of ultra-loose settings; a Fed that moves erratically based on political pressure would complicate Tokyo’s ability to anchor yen expectations. South Korea and Taiwan, with their deep integration into U.S. semiconductor supply chains and their extreme sensitivity to U.S. monetary conditions, are watching rate expectations with the attention of nervous creditors.
For emerging markets, the stakes are existential in the literal financial sense. Dollar-denominated debt in countries from Ghana to Sri Lanka to Pakistan has been refinanced on the assumption of gradual Fed normalisation. A Warsh Fed that delivers abrupt policy swings — cutting aggressively and then reversing under inflation pressure — would produce the kind of dollar volatility that has historically triggered emerging-market crises. The 1994 “taper tantrum” and the 2013 episode are still institutional memories in finance ministries from Nairobi to Jakarta.
Key Risks at a Glance
Senate confirmation hurdles: Senator Tillis’s blocking posture remains the most immediate obstacle. The DOJ investigation into Powell must conclude, or a political arrangement must be reached, before Warsh can reach the full Senate floor.
Oil-shock inflation trap: With Brent crude approaching $100 and Iran-related supply disruptions ongoing, the economic environment may simply not permit the rate cuts Trump is demanding — placing Warsh between political expectations and empirical reality from day one.
FOMC internal dynamics: Warsh would inherit a committee populated with economists who are skeptical of his AI-productivity thesis and committed to data-dependence. Herding that committee toward his preferred regime without triggering public dissent will test the “family fight” model immediately.
Markets pricing a rate hike: Futures markets pricing a 35–40% probability of a rate hike by December represent the starkest possible rebuke of the political narrative that Warsh was nominated to validate. Markets are telling the White House, as politely as they can manage, that the data does not cooperate with the political preference.
Conflict-of-interest scrutiny: The partially opaque Juggernaut Fund holdings, the Druckenmiller family office advisory relationship, and the Estée Lauder board connections of his wife will all face rigorous Democratic interrogation. The Fed has been plagued by ethics controversies under Powell; a fresh scandal in the opening months of Warsh’s tenure would be institutionally devastating.
The Fall Guy Thesis, and the Alternative
Let me be direct, as this column has always endeavoured to be: there is a real and non-trivial probability that Kevin Warsh is walking into a trap of historical proportions. A president who demands 1 percent rates in an economy facing energy-driven inflation is setting his Fed chair up to fail publicly. When Warsh — if he is as serious about his own intellectual framework as he claims — resists that pressure, the blame will flow downward, not upward. The president who manufactured the demand will not absorb the political cost of the unfulfilled promise. The chair who refused to deliver it will.
This is the “fall guy” scenario, and it is not a fringe interpretation. It is a structural feature of the relationship Trump has publicly constructed with his own nominee.
But there is an alternative reading that deserves equal weight. If the AI productivity thesis is substantially correct — if 2026 and 2027 see measurable gains in total factor productivity driven by AI deployment across the economy — then Warsh’s framework may prove prescient rather than convenient. A Fed chair who both cuts short-term rates and shrinks the balance sheet, who liberalises bank regulation without abandoning prudential oversight, and who restores internal deliberative discipline to the FOMC, could be a genuinely transformative figure. Not because he served the president’s preferences, but because the president’s preferences happened to align, in this narrow window, with what the economy actually needed.
History will record which of these two Warshes materialises. The April 21 hearing is unlikely to settle the question definitively — confirmation hearings rarely do. But watch carefully for one thing in his testimony: how he responds when senators ask whether he would resist political pressure to cut rates if inflation were rising. The specificity or vagueness of that answer will tell you everything about which of these men we are actually welcoming into the most powerful monetary policy chair on earth.
What Warsh Should Do — and What He Probably Won’t
Let me close with a prescription, because economists who decline to prescribe are merely commentators in academic disguise.
Warsh should use his confirmation hearing tomorrow to make one unambiguous commitment: that the Federal Reserve’s policy decisions will be driven solely by its dual mandate data and its long-run inflation credibility, and that no future communication from the White House will be treated as a policy input. He should announce that he will not pre-brief the administration on rate decisions, will not discuss upcoming FOMC votes with Treasury officials, and will not use social media interactions with the president as evidence of economic consensus.
He should then build a policy framework genuinely anchored in the AI-productivity thesis — not as a convenient justification for cuts the president wants, but as a seriously evidenced analytical position subject to revision when contradicted by data. If oil shocks persist and inflation rises, he must say clearly and publicly that cuts are off the table. If AI productivity materialises as forecast, the cuts will follow naturally from the data.
This path is the one that preserves institutional credibility, serves the long-run interest of American households and businesses, and — not incidentally — protects Warsh himself from becoming history’s footnote as the chair who let the Fed’s independence die quietly under the cover of a productivity boom that never fully arrived.
Whether he takes it depends entirely on the quality of his own convictions. Tomorrow morning, the markets will begin to find out.
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